Silver from Satan explained

Silver from Satan
Format:drama play
Runtime:60 mins
Country:Australia
Language:English
Syndicates:ABC
Director:Lawrence H. Cecil[1]
Record Location:Adelaide

Silver from Satan is a 1937 Australian radio play by Max Afford.

It was originally recorded in Adelaide.[2]

The play was popular and was performed again in 1938 and 1940.

Premise

According to Wireless Weekly

Laid in a provance in Italy, this drama revolves about the troubled period of 1748, when the tyrannical Duke Allessandro oppressed his people and fomented the country into a state of open rebellion. Secret societies sprang up, plotting the overthrow of the tyrant, and one of these, the Brotherhood of the Holy- Cross was led by the gentle and wise Salamo, a rich Italian landholder. On Salamo’s land worked Guido Fornari, a young farmer. To this lad came the unexpected windfall of a number of coins, found buried in Salamo’s field. The author has traced the influence of this money on the young farmer's character, and the Climax of the play, inevitable in its tragedy, is highly dramatic.

Notes and References

  1. News: Policy Talks Over 5CL=CK . . South Australia . 18 September 1937 . 30 October 2023 . 17 . National Library of Australia.
  2. News: Praise For Adelaide Amateur Players . . South Australia . 5 October 1937 . 30 October 2023 . 25 . National Library of Australia.